23 years ago, I met Guido, fell in love with Python, and took a turn that
changed the course of my life and career. You can't ever know where your
decisions will lead you, so you just have to set a course and trust the wind.

In the 1990s, as we moved the Python.Org infrastructure from the Netherlands
to the US, we inherited the Majordomo list server that was running
python-list@python.org. There were changes we wanted to make and features
we wanted to add, but it was becoming increasingly clear that Majordomo had to
be replaced. Besides being difficult to hack on, it was written in Perl, so
of course that wouldn't do at all. Python was an upstart disrupting its
space, and we needed a list server written in Python that was malleable enough
for us to express our ideas.

It was about that time that our friend John Viega showed us a project he'd
been working on. He'd wanted to connect a popular, local Charlottesville,
Virginia band with their fans at UVA, and email lists were an important way to
do that. Of course, no one wants to manage such lists manually, and if you're
not happy with the existing options, what does any self-respecting developer
do? You write yourself a new one! As for implementation language, was there
really any other choice? History celebrates this momentous confluence of
events: the band became the mega-rock powerhouse known as the Dave Matthews
Band, and the mailing list software John wrote is what became GNU Mailman.

(Aside: I'll never forget the time my band the Cravin' Dogs played at TRAX,
a Charlottesville music venue. The place …